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Ministry of Finance. Fiscal Rules Eldad Shidlovsky, Head of Economics and Research Department. Ministry of Finance May 2009. Fiscal Rules - Historical Perspective. The “Deficit Reduction Law” was enacted in 1992. In the first few years, it addressed only the level of the deficit.
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Ministry of Finance Fiscal Rules Eldad Shidlovsky, Head of Economics and Research Department. Ministry of Finance May 2009
Fiscal Rules - Historical Perspective • The “Deficit Reduction Law” was enacted in 1992. • In the first few years, it addressed only the level of the deficit. • In 2005 an expenditure limit was added.
Fiscal Rules - Historical Perspective Central Government's Budget Deficit)As Percent of GDP(
The Use of Fiscal Rules in other Countries The rules vary among countries: • The rules refer to the public sector as a whole or to the central government budget. • The rules focus on the size of the deficit, on public debt, size of public expenditure etc. • Some countries set rules for one year, some use multi-year rules, and some apply rules over the course of the business cycle.
Why are Fiscal Rules Necessary? • Creation of budgetary anchors that prevent sliding into a loss of fiscal control. • Increased stability and credibility of economic policy in the eyes of the public. • Increased budgetary transparency. • Support for improved efficiency of the public sector.
Difficulties in Applying Fiscal Rules • Difficulty in applying anti-cyclical policy. • Postponement of expenditures. • The need to abstain from solutions that bypass the budget.
Guidelines for the Proposed Fiscal Rule • Avoiding as much as possible the use of economic forecasts. • The rule should be as simple and transparent as possible. • The rule should maintain the credibility of budgetary policy. • The rule should prevent the need for frequent changes, exceptions (such as the "boxes"), and solutions that bypass the budget. • The rule should not create a pro-cyclical policy.
Key Objectives in Establishing the Fiscal Rule • The key objective in the short term is a return to fiscal stability by committing to a downward deficit trend. • The key objective in the medium and long term is to achieve a decrease of the debt-to-GDP ratio to around 60 percent by the end of the next decade.
Reasons for Reduction of the Debt-to-GDP Ratio Gross Public Debtpercent of GDP, estimates 2008* *Source: OECD, November 2008, Israel: MoF
Reasons for Reduction of the Debt-to-GDP Ratio • Increases the economy's resilience to external shocks. • The burden of defense spending. • Population aging. • Debt reduction decreases interest expenses and financing costs.
The Proposed Rule The fiscal rule will be based on two components: • A restriction of real expenditure growth. • Future increase in expenses will be a function of the debt-to-GDP ratio. • A budget deficit ceiling – the budget deficit ceiling will decrease gradually.
The Proposed Rule Development of thedebt-GDP ratio simulation, 2007-2020 Growth assumptions: GDP growth will be -1% in 2009, 1.5% in 2010 and 3.5% thereafter